Modernist 20th Century /07 December 2003

226

nesting tables

Leo Uris fabricated designs for both Donald Deskey and Paul Lobel.
Literature:
These tables are illustrated in a period photograph in the Deskey Achives at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, New York

Donald Deskey, born in 1894 in Blue Earth, Minnesota, is one of America’s most prolific designers. For his formal training, Deskey began at the University of California Berkeley and later moved to the San Francisco Institute of Art before attending The Art Institute of Chicago. In 1920, in what would prove to be a formative experience, Deskey moved to Paris where he was exposed to the latest Art Deco style. Back in New York by 1926, Deskey started his career in advertising and quickly became known for his innovative designs. When his client Reynolds Metals asked him to find a new use for their aluminum foil, he ingeniously designed a series of stylish foiled wallpaper that was later put into production by F. Schumacher & Company. His design sensibility captured the attention of New York City’s most illustrious residents and Deskey completed interiors for Adam Gimbel, John D. Rockefeller and Abby Aldridge Rockefeller among others. In arguably his most famous commission, Deskey designed the interiors of Radio City Music Hall. In 1939, Deskey collaborated with the Royal Metal Manufacturing Co. to produce a suite of furniture for the New York World’s Fair World of Tomorrow exhibition. In 1943, he established Donald Deskey and Associates and the following year was one of fifteen founding members of the Society of Industrial Designers. A champion of both product and industrial design, Deskey rewrote the way people thought about designed objects. His design for a city lamppost is still in use in New York City today, and he crafted landmark campaigns for Proctor and Gamble, Crest toothpaste, as well as Tide Detergent. Deskey died in 1989. Today his work can be found in museum collections such as the Cooper Hewitt Museum of Design, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago, among many others across America.